Archive for the 'local tv' Category

Sep 17 2008

Kudos to the Times During the Floods

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I was very impressed with the coverage on NWI.com of the recent flooding in the area. With no truly local TV station able to provide round the clock coverage, The Times stepped in and provided that coverage.

Their site was continually updated all throughout the recent crisis with the latest information. You could tell their writers were putting in overtime. They literally filled the site with content about the flooding, all the while continuing regular news coverage. It became a place to find out about the latest road and school closings. The kind of invaluable resource we need in this area.

One thing I and many others wanted to see was pictures. NWI.com became a central place where people could submit and view photos of the destruction in the area. It was fantastic. I literally went through hundreds of pictures and personal accounts.

NWI.com is truly becoming an online portal for Northwest Indiana. The design of their site is clean and efficient, it’s easy to navigate around and it loads quickly. Kudos goes out the the team managing the The Time web operations, they’re doing a fantastic job. I’ve managed content myself, but not on this scale, so I know the kind of work these guys do.

As someone who works doing SEO and Social Media, their site is doing a fantastic job taking advantage of these new technologies. The site has video, RSS Feeds, user comments (though I don’t recommend reading them, your I.Q. will go down) and ways to share content on other social networking sites.

I was surprised to see them stream the Gubernatorial debate live last night. This was an awesome thing to do since there really isn’t a way to air that stuff locally on TV (though I don’t know if the local PBS aired it, probably not).

NWI is undeserved by the major media networks because we are crammed between South Bend and Chicago and thus get the TV networks in both cities. Because of this, coverage on the Chicago and South Bend Networks about Northwest Indiana is sparse, to say the least. The Times is filling that void by using the internet to create a portal for NWI as well as it’s own de facto media network, as we’ve seen with them streaming live events.

Let’s hope they keep it up. I’d like to see a web based video network dedicated to NWI and maybe radio feeds or podcasts. I would also like to see them embrace blogs more and maybe create a directory/agrigator of local blogs.

Speaking of blogs. I was disappointed with NWI Bloggers during the flooding. This is probably the worst disaster to hit the area in a long time and many local blogs were silent (though a couple did blog). Keeping in mind that these blogs are run by people and they were probably dealing with the affects of the disaster. But Blogging provides a unique way to citizens to share their experiences and pictures. Granted, I didn’t write much about it myself because Valpo was spared the worst of the floods and I pretty much stayed in to avoid the chaos.

If you wrote about the floods, please send me links to your entries. I’d like to aggregate the links onto one page so that people can see what other people had to say about this terrible disaster.

2 responses so far

May 17 2008

The End of Cable Access TV in Northwest Indiana?

Published by admin under ditch mitch, local tv, politics, valpo


This came across the wire in my e-mail box. Apparently, the Indiana Assembly, in their infinite wisdom, passed a telecom reform bill, HB 1279 that took control of cable franchises away from local authorities in Indiana and gave it to the state for centralized control, allowing the cable companies to screw localities on their contracts. In exchange for some pathetic promises of jobs and infrastructure, the state let them basically write the new regulations. 

The new law basically gave carte blanche to the cable companies to do whatever they wanted. Some of the provisions of the law include (taken from www.indyaccess.org):

  • Eliminate basic cable rate regulation (yay, they can raise rates! woohoo!)
  • Reduce franchise fees paid to local government (20-30% for Indianapolis) and eliminate audits (they have to pay less to operate in each town)
  • Threaten the financial viability and growth of public, education and government (PEG) access TV channels (basically get rid of public access)
  • Eliminate basic telephone rate regulation and enable local measured phone service (yay, they can raise these rates too! woohoo!)
  • Curtail the development of municipal broadband projects, including those with corporate partnerships (say good-bye to free local Wifi provided by the city, bye Valpo Wireless)

So, what has this meant on the ground? Well, cable access television in Northwest Indiana and statewide is pretty much gone. The law does not force or even compel the cable operators to continue providing the public service of providing cable access.

According to the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette, last fall Comcast sent notice to many municipalities such as Valparaiso and informed them they did not have to provide facilities anymore for public access TV. They demanded all the towns in NWI get together and jointly create and manage new facilities. Of course, this did not happen. 

Public Access broadcasts ceased in Northwest Indiana last December. Now, granted most of the stuff on cable access was crap. But it provided a valuable creative and political outputs to the communities. Now, there is practically no outlet at all. The people of Northwest Indiana have been silenced by Big Media.

It’s very clear that HB 1279 is a terrible law for the consumers of this state and Northwest Indiana most of all. It has given more monopolistic controls to the big media conglomerates and silenced local voices. Nice to know Mitch continues to be on our side! 

I’m sure if the cable companies had their way, they’d get rid of C-SPAN too. It’d be great if Indiana had a Citizen Utilities Board like Illinois. You do not want to mess with those guys, they are actually looking out for consumers in Illinois. Yet another reason Northwest Indiana should succeed and join Illinois. We already get their TV, so it’s like we’re with them already. One would hope that the local PBS station, WYIN - Lakeshore PBS, steps in and provides an outlet for people wishing to get on the air.

Or maybe it’s time for cable access programming to move to the internet.

5 responses so far